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1.
Kinetics of intracellular ice formation (IIF) for isolated rat hepatocytes was studied using a cryomicroscopy system. The effect of the cooling rate on IIF was investigated between 20 and 400 degrees C/min in isotonic solution. At 50 degrees C/min and below, none of the hepatocytes underwent IIF; whereas at 150 degrees C/min and above, IIF was observed throughout the entire hepatocyte population. The temperature at which 50% of hepatocytes showed IIF (50TIIF) was almost constant with an average value of -7.7 degrees C. Different behavior was seen in isothermal subzero holding temperatures in the presence of extracellular ice. 50TIIF from isothermal temperature experiments was approximately -5 degrees C as opposed to -7.7 degrees C for constant cooling rate experiments. These experiments clearly demonstrated both the time and temperature dependence of IIF. On the other hand, in cooling experiments in the absence of extracellular ice, IIF was not observed until approximately -20 degrees C (at which temperature the whole suspension was frozen spontaneously) suggesting the involvement of the external ice in the initiation of IIF. The effect of dimethyl sulfoxide (Me2SO) on IIF was also quantified. 50TIIF decreased from -7.7 degrees C in the absence of Me2SO to -16.8 degrees C in 2.0 M Me2SO for a cooling rate of 400 degrees C/min. However, the cooling rate (between 75 and 400 degrees C/min) did not significantly affect 50TIIF (-8.7 degrees C) in 0.5 M Me2SO. These results suggest that multistep protocols will be required for the cryopreservation of hepatocytes.  相似文献   

2.
Mazur P  Pinn IL  Kleinhans FW 《Cryobiology》2007,55(2):158-166
The formation of ice crystals within cells (IIF) is lethal. The classical approach to avoiding it is to cool cells slowly enough so that nearly all their supercooled freezable water leaves the cell osmotically before they have cooled to a temperature that permits IIF. An alternative approach is to cool the cell rapidly to just above its ice nucleation temperature, and hold it there long enough to permit dehydration. Then, the cell is cooled rapidly to -70 degrees C or below. This approach, often called interrupted rapid cooling, is the subject of this paper. Mouse oocytes were suspended in 1.5M ethylene glycol (EG)/PBS, rapidly cooled (50 degrees C/min) to -25 degrees C and held for 5, 10, 20, 30, or 40 min before being rapidly cooled (50 degrees C/min) to -70 degrees C. In cells held for 5 min, IIF (flashing) occurred abruptly during the second rapid cool. As the holding period was increased to 10 and 20 min, fewer cells flashed during the cooling and more turned black during warming. Finally, when the oocytes were held 30 or 40 min, relatively few flashed during either cooling or warming. Immediately upon thawing, these oocytes were highly shrunken and crenated. However, upon warming to 20 degrees C, they regained most of their normal volume, shape, and appearance. These oocytes have intact cell membranes, and we refer to them as survivors. We conclude that 30 min at -25 degrees C removes nearly all intracellular freezable water, the consequence of which is that IIF occurs neither during the subsequent rapid cooling to -70 degrees C nor during warming.  相似文献   

3.
Cryomicroscopic observations were made of the volumetric behavior and kinetics of intracellular ice formation (IIF) in Drosophila melanogaster embryos in a modified cell culture medium (BD.20) or BD.20 + 2 M ethylene glycol. After rapid cooling to a given temperature, transient volumetric contraction of the embryos during the isothermal period was quantified by computerized video image analysis. Fitting these data to the numerical solution of the volume flux equation yielded estimates of the hydraulic permeability coefficient (Lp) for individual embryos at various subfreezing temperatures. Lp approximately followed an Arrhenius relation between -2 and -9 degrees C, with a value of 0.168 microns/(min-atm) extrapolated to 0 degrees C and an apparent activation energy delta E of 38.9 kcal/mol. IIF during an isothermal period occurred at random times whose characteristic temperature range and kinetics were affected by the presence of ethylene glycol. A stochastic process model developed to fit these data indicated the influence of both time-dependent and instantaneous components of IIF, presumed to be the result of seeding and heterogeneous nucleation, respectively. The presence of 2 M ethylene glycol depressed the characteristic temperature of instantaneous IIF by about 12 degrees C and reduced the rate constant for time-dependent IIF. Comparison with observed incidences of IIF yielded an estimate of the supercooling tolerance of 3 to 5 degrees C.  相似文献   

4.
During freezing, intracellular ice formation (IIF) has been correlated with loss in viability for a wide variety of biological systems. Hence, determination of IIF characteristics is essential in the development of an efficient methodology for cryopreservation. In this study, IIF characteristics of hepatocytes cultured in a collagen matrix were determined using cryomicroscopy. Four factors influenced the IIF behavior of the hepatocytes in the matrix: cooling rate, final cooling temperature, concentration of Me2SO, and time in culture prior to freezing. The maximum cumulative fraction of cells with IIF increased with increasing cooling rate. For cultured cells frozen in Dulbecco's modified Eagle's medium (DMEM), the cooling rate for which 50% of the cells formed ice (B50) was 70 degrees C/min for cells frozen after 1 day in culture and decreased to 15 degrees C/min for cells frozen after 7 days in culture. When cells were frozen in a 0.5 M Me2SO + DMEM solution, the value of B50 decreased from 70 to 50 degrees C/min for cells in culture for 1 day and from 15 to 10 degrees C/min for cells in culture for 7 days. The value of the average temperature for IIF (TIIF) for cultured cells was only slightly depressed by the addition of Me2SO when compared to the IIF behavior of other cell types. The results of this study indicate that the presence of the collagen matrix alters significantly the IIF characteristics of hepatocytes. Thus freezing studies using hepatocytes in suspension are not useful in predicting the freezing behavior of hepatocytes cultured in a collagen matrix. Furthermore, the weak effect of Me2SO on IIF characteristics implies that lower concentrations of Me2SO (0.5 M) may be just as effective in preserving viability. Finally, the value of B50 measured in this study indicates that cooling rates nearly an order of magnitude faster than those previously investigated could be used for cryopreservation of the hepatocytes in a collagen gel.  相似文献   

5.
MII mouse oocytes in 1 and 1.5M ethylene glycol(EG)/phosphate buffered saline have been subjected to rapid freezing at 50 degrees C/min to -70 degrees C. When this rapid freezing is preceded by a variable hold time of 0-3 min after the initial extracellular ice formation (EIF), the duration of the hold time has a substantial effect on the temperature at which the oocytes subsequently undergo intracellular ice formation (IIF). For example, in 1M EG, the IIF temperatures are -23.7 and -39.2 degrees C with 0 and 2 min hold times; in 1.5M EG, the corresponding IIF temperatures are -29.1 and -40.8 degrees C.  相似文献   

6.
Cryomicroscopy was used to study the incidence of intracellular ice formation (IIF) in protoplasts isolated from rye (Secale cereale) leaves during subfreezing isothermal periods and in in vitro mature bovine oocytes during cooling at constant rates. IIF in protoplasts occurred at random times during isothermal periods, and the kinetics of IIF were faster as isothermal temperature decreased. Mean IIF times decreased from approximately 1700 s at -4.0 degrees C to less than 1 s at -18.5 degrees C. Total incidence of IIF after 200 s increased from 4% at -4.0 degrees C to near 100% at -15.5 degrees C. IIF behavior in protoplasts was qualitatively similar to that for Drosophila melanogaster embryos over the same temperature ranges (Myers et al., Cryobiology 26, 472-484, 1989), but the kinetics of IIF were about five times faster in protoplasts. IIF observations in linear cooling of bovine oocytes indicated a median IIF temperature of -11 degrees C at 16 degrees C/min and total incidences of 97%, 50%, and 19% at 16, 8, and 4 degrees C/min, respectively. A stochastic model of IIF was developed which preserved certain features of an earlier model (Pitt et al. Cryobiology 28, 72-86, 1991), namely Weibull behavior in IIF temperatures during rapid linear cooling, but with a departure from the concept of a supercooling tolerance. Instead, the new model uses the osmotic state of the cell, represented by the extent of supercooling, as the independent variable governing the kinetics of IIF. Two kinetic parameters are needed for the model: a scale factor tau 0 dictating the sensitivity to supercooling, and an exponent rho dictating the strength of time dependency. The model was fit to the data presented in this study as well as those from Myers et al. and Pitt et al. for D. melanogaster embryos with and without cryoprotectant, and from Toner et al. (Cryobiology 28, 55-71, 1991) for mouse oocytes. In protoplasts, D. melanogaster embryos, and mouse oocytes, the parameters were estimated from IIF times in the early stages of isothermal periods, while the osmotic state of the cell was relatively constant. In bovine oocytes, the parameters were estimated from linear cooling data. Without further calibration, the model was used to predict total IIF incidence under different cooling regimes. For protoplasts, D. melanogaster embryos, and bovine oocytes, the model's predictions were quite accurate compared to the actual data. In mouse oocytes, adjustment of the hydraulic permeability coefficient (Lp) at 0 degree C was required to yield realistic behavior.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)  相似文献   

7.
Kinetics of intracellular ice formation (IIF) under various freezing conditions was investigated for mouse oocytes at metaphase II obtained from B6D2F1 mice. A new cryostage with improved optical performance and "isothermal" temperature field was used for nucleation experiments. The maximum thermal gradient across the window was less than 0.1 degrees C/10 mm at sample temperatures near 0 degrees C. The dependence of IIF on the initial concentration of the suspending medium was found to be pronounced. The mean IIF temperatures were found to be -9.56, -12.49, -17.63, -22.20 degrees C for freezing at 120 degrees C/min in 200, 285, 510, and 735 mosm phosphate-buffered saline, respectively. For concentrations higher than 735 mosm, the kinetics of IIF showed a break point at approximately -31 degrees C. Below -31 degrees C, all the remaining unfrozen oocytes underwent IIF almost immediately over a temperature range of less than 3 degrees C. This dramatic shift in the kinetics of IIF suggests that there were two distinct mechanisms responsible for IIF during freezing. The effect of the cooling rate on the kinetics of IIF was also investigated in isotonic PBS. At 1 degrees C/min none of the oocytes contained ice, whereas, at 5 degrees C/min all the oocytes contained ice. The mean IIF temperatures for cooling rates between 1 and 120 degrees C/min were almost constant with an average of -12.82 +/- 0.6 degrees C (SEM). In addition, constant temperature experiments were conducted in isotonic PBS. The percentages of oocytes with IIF were 0, 50, 60, and 95% for -3.8, -6.4, -7.72, and -8.85 degrees C. In undercooling experiments, IIF was not observed until approximately -20 degrees C (at which temperature the whole suspension was frozen spontaneously), suggesting the involvement of the external ice in the initiation of IIF between approximately -5 and -31 degrees C during freezing of oocytes.  相似文献   

8.
The occurrence of intracellular ice formation (IIF) during freezing, or the lack there of, is the single most important factor determining whether or not cells survive cryopreservation. One important determinant of IIF is the temperature at which a supercooled cell nucleates. To avoid intracellular ice formation, the cell must be cooled slowly enough so that osmotic dehydration eliminates nearly all cell supercooling before reaching that temperature. This report is concerned with factors that determine the nucleation temperature in mouse oocytes. Chief among these is the concentration of cryoprotective additive (here, glycerol or ethylene glycol). The temperature for IIF decreases from -14 degrees C in buffered isotonic saline (PBS) to -41 degrees C in 1M glycerol/PBS and 1.5M ethylene glycol/PBS. The latter rapidly permeates the oocyte; the former does not. The initial extracellular freezing at -3.9 to -7.8 degrees C, depending on the CPA concentration, deforms the cell. In PBS that deformation often leads to IIF; in CPA it does not. The oocytes are surrounded by a zona pellucida. That structure appears to impede the growth of external ice through it, but not to block it. In most cases, IIF is characterized by an abrupt blackening or flashing during cooling. But in some cases, especially with dezonated oocytes, a pale brown veil abruptly forms during cooling followed by slower blackening during warming. Above -30 degrees C, flashing occurs in a fraction of a second. Below -30 degrees C, it commonly occurs much more slowly. We have observed instances where flashing is accompanied by the abrupt ejection of cytoplasm. During freezing, cells lie in unfrozen channels between the growing external ice. From phase diagram data, we have computed the fraction of water and solution that remains unfrozen at the observed flash temperatures and the concentrations of salt and CPA in those channels. The results are somewhat ambiguous as to which of these characteristics best correlates with IIF.  相似文献   

9.
Protective effect of intracellular ice during freezing?   总被引:9,自引:0,他引:9  
Acker JP  McGann LE 《Cryobiology》2003,46(2):197-202
Injury results during freezing when cells are exposed to increasing concentrations of solutes or by the formation of intracellular ice. Methods to protect cells from the damaging effects of freezing have focused on the addition of cryoprotective chemicals and the determination of optimal cooling rates. Based on other studies of innocuous intracellular ice formation, this study investigates the potential for this ice to protect cells from injury during subsequent slow cooling. V-79W Chinese hamster fibroblasts and Madin-Darby Canine Kidney (MDCK) cells were cultured as single attached cells or confluent monolayers. The incidence of intracellular ice formation (IIF) in the cultures at the start of cooling was pre-determined using one of two different extracellular ice nucleation temperatures (-5 or -10 degrees C). Samples were then cooled at 1 degrees C/min to the experimental temperature (-5 to -40 degrees C) where samples were warmed rapidly and cell survival assessed using membrane integrity and metabolic activity. For single attached cells, the lower ice nucleation temperature, corresponding to increased incidence of IIF, resulted in decreased post-thaw cell recovery. In contrast, confluent monolayers in which IIF has been shown to be innocuous, show higher survival after cooling to temperatures as low as -40 degrees C, supporting the concept that intracellular ice confers cryoprotection by preventing cell dehydration during subsequent slow cooling.  相似文献   

10.
A thermodynamic model was used to evaluate and optimize a rapid three-step nonequilibrium freezing protocol for one-cell mouse embryos in the absence of cryoprotectants (CPAs) that avoided lethal intracellular ice formation (IIF). Biophysical parameters of one-cell mouse embryos were determined at subzero temperatures using cryomicroscopic investigations (i.e., the water permeability of the plasma membrane, its temperature dependence, and the parameters for heterogeneous IIF). The parameters were then incorporated into the thermodynamic model, which predicted the likelihood of IIF. Model predictions showed that IIF could be prevented at a cooling rate of 120 degrees C/min when a 5-min holding period was inserted at -10 degrees C to assure cellular dehydration. This predicted freezing protocol, which avoided IIF in the absence of CPAs, was two orders of magnitude faster than conventional embryo cryopreservation cooling rates of between 0.5 and 1 degree C/min. At slow cooling rates, embryos predominantly follow the equilibrium phase diagram and do not undergo IIF, but mechanisms other than IIF (e.g., high electrolyte concentrations, mechanical effects, and others) cause cellular damage. We tested the predictions of our thermodynamic model using a programmable freezer and confirmed the theoretical predictions. The membrane integrity of one-cell mouse embryos, as assessed by fluorescein diacetate retention, was approximately 80% after freezing down to -45 degrees C by the rapid nonequilibrium protocol derived from our model. The fact that embryos could be rapidly frozen in the absence of CPAs without damage to the plasma membrane as assessed by fluorescein diacetate retention is a new and exciting finding. Further refinements of this protocol is necessary to retain the developmental competence of the embryos.  相似文献   

11.
Nucleation temperatures of intraembryonic water and cryoprotectant penetration in zebrafish embryos were studied using differential scanning calorimetry. The effects of embryo developmental stage, dechorionation, partial removal of yolk, cooling rate, and cryoprotectant treatment on the temperatures of intraembryonic freezing were investigated. Embryo stages were found to have a significant effect on the nucleation temperatures of intact embryos. Freeze onset temperatures of -11.9 +/- 1.5, -15.6 +/- 0.3, and -20.5 +/- 0.1 degrees C were obtained for intact embryos at 6-somite, prim-6, and high-pec stages, respectively. After dechorionation, the freeze onset temperatures of intraembryonic water shifted to significantly lower temperatures, being -23.5 +/- 0.8, -18.7 +/- 0.7, -24.9 +/- 0.8 degrees C for 6-somite, prim-6, and high-pec stages, respectively. Yolk-reduced high-pec stage embryos showed significantly lower nucleation temperatures with an average onset at -27.9 +/- 0.4 degrees C. The effect of cryoprotectant treatment on the nucleation temperatures of intraembryonic water varies among different embryo stages and different cryoprotectants. Thirty-minute treatment with 2 M methanol significantly decreased the nucleation temperatures of dechorionated 6-somite embryos whilst no temperature decrease was observed for prim-6 or yolk-reduced high-pec embryos. Thirty-minute exposure to 1 M propylene glycol did not significantly affect the nucleation temperatures of dechorionated 6-somite, prim-6, or yolk-reduced high-pec embryos. In order to increase the permeability of embryos to cryoprotectants, the yolk sacs of dechorionated embryos at 6-somite or prim-6 embryos were punctured with a sharp micro-needle before exposure to cryoprotectants. The punctured prim-6 embryos showed significantly lower temperatures of intraembryonic freezing after 30 min of exposure to 2 M methanol following the multi-punctures. The nucleation temperatures of punctured 6-somite or prim-6 embryos were also decreased significantly after exposure to 1 M propylene glycol for 30 min. These results suggested that in intact embryos, intraembryonic freezing appeared to be seeded by the external ice in the perivitelline fluid and that in dechorionated embryos (in the absence of external water) intraembryonic freezing was more likely a consequence of heterogeneous nucleation. Methanol was demonstrated to show a limited degree of penetration into prim-6 stage embryos, but it did not penetrate later-stage embryos such as prim-6 and yolk-reduced high-pec. No propylene glycol permeation was observed for embryos at all stages. However, multi-punctures of yolk resulted in the permeation of both cryoprotectants into prim-6 embryos and propylene glycol permeation into 6-somite embryos. These findings may have important implications in overcoming the problem associated with the low membrane permeability of zebrafish embryos to cryoprotectants.  相似文献   

12.
A three-part, coupled model of cell dehydration, nucleation, and crystal growth was used to study intracellular ice formation (IIF) in cultured hepatocytes frozen in the presence of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). Heterogeneous nucleation temperatures were predicted as a function of DMSO concentration and were in good agreement with experimental data. Simulated freezing protocols correctly predicted and explained experimentally observed effects of cooling rate, warming rate, and storage temperature on hepatocyte function. For cells cooled to -40 degrees C, no IIF occurred for cooling rates less than 10 degrees C/min. IIF did occur at faster cooling rates, and the predicted volume of intracellular ice increased with increasing cooling rate. Cells cooled at 5 degrees C/min to -80 degrees C were shown to undergo nucleation at -46.8 degrees C, with the consequence that storage temperatures above this value resulted in high viability independent of warming rate, whereas colder storage temperatures resulted in cell injury for slow warming rates. Cell damage correlated positively with predicted intracellular ice volume, and an upper limit for the critical ice content was estimated to be 3.7% of the isotonic water content. The power of the model was limited by difficulties in estimating the cytosol viscosity and membrane permeability as functions of DMSO concentration at low temperatures.  相似文献   

13.
Successful cryopreservation demands there be little or no intracellular ice. One procedure is classical slow equilibrium freezing, and it has been successful in many cases. However, for some important cell types, including some mammalian oocytes, it has not. For the latter, there are increasing attempts to cryopreserve them by vitrification. However, even if intracellular ice formation (IIF) is prevented during cooling, it can still occur during the warming of a vitrified sample. Here, we examine two aspects of this occurrence in mouse oocytes. One took place in oocytes that were partly dehydrated by an initial hold for 12 min at -25 degrees C. They were then cooled rapidly to -70 degrees C and warmed slowly, or they were warmed rapidly to intermediate temperatures and held. These oocytes underwent no IIF during cooling but blackened from IIF during warming. The blackening rate increased about 5-fold for each five-degree rise in temperature. Upon thawing, they were dead. The second aspect involved oocytes that had been vitrified by cooling to -196 degrees C while suspended in a concentrated solution of cryoprotectants and warmed at rates ranging from 140 degrees C/min to 3300 degrees C/min. Survivals after warming at 140 degrees C/min and 250 degrees C/min were low (<30%). Survivals after warming at > or =2200 degrees C/min were high (80%). When warmed slowly, they were killed, apparently by the recrystallization of previously formed small internal ice crystals. The similarities and differences in the consequences of the two types of freezing are discussed.  相似文献   

14.
We are currently investigating factors that influence intracellular ice formation (IIF) in mouse oocytes and oocytes of the frog Xenopus. A major reason for choosing these two species is that while their eggs normally do not possess aquaporin channels in their plasma membranes, these channels can be made to express. We wish to see whether IIF is affected by the presence of these channels. The present Xenopus study deals with control eggs not expressing aquaporins. The main factor studied has been the effect of a cryoprotective agent [ethylene glycol (EG) or glycerol] and its concentration. The general procedure was to (a) cool the oocytes on a cryostage to slightly below the temperatures at which extracellular ice formation occurs, (b) warm them to just below the melting point, and (c) then re-cool them to -50 degrees C at 10 degrees C/min. In the majority of cases, IIF occurs well into step (c), but a sizeable minority undergo IIF in steps (a) or (b). The former group we refer to as low-temperature flashers; the latter as high-temperature flashers. IIF is manifested as abrupt blackening of the egg, which we refer to as "flashing." Observations on the Linkam cryostage are restricted to Stage I and II oocytes, which have diameters of 200 300 microm. In the absence of a cryoprotective agent, that is in frog Ringers, the mean flash temperature for the low-temperature freezers is -11.4 degrees C, although a sizeable percentage flash at temperatures much closer to that of the EIF (-3.9 degrees C). When EG is present, the flash temperature for the low-temperatures freezers drops significantly to approximately -20 degrees C for EG concentrations ranging from 0.5 to 1.5 M. The presence of 1.5 M glycerol also substantially reduces the IIF temperature of the low-temperature freezers; namely, to -29 degrees C, but 0.5 and 1 M glycerol exert little or no effect. The IIF temperatures observed using the Linkam cryostage agree well with those estimated by calorimetry [F.W. Kleinhans, J.F. Guenther, D.M. Roberts, P. Mazur, Analysis of intracellular ice nucleation in Xenopus oocytes by differential scanning calorimetry, Cryobiology 52 (2006) 128-138]. The IIF temperatures in Xenopus are substantially higher than those observed in mouse oocytes [P. Mazur, S. Seki, I.L. Pinn, F.W. Kleinhans, K. Edashige, Extra- and intracellular ice formation in mouse oocytes, Cryobiology 51 (2005) 29-53]. Perhaps that is a reflection of their much larger size.  相似文献   

15.
Mouse spermatozoa in 18% raffinose and 3.8% Oxyrase in 0.25 x PBS exhibit high motilities when frozen to -70 degrees C at 20-130 degrees C/min and then rapidly warmed. However, survival is <10% when they are frozen at 260 or 530 degrees C/min, presumably because, at those high rates, intracellular water cannot leave rapidly enough to prevent extensive supercooling and this supercooling leads to nucleation and freezing in situ (intracellular ice formation [IIF]). The probability of IIF as a function of cooling rate can be computed by coupled differential equations that describe the extent of the loss of cell water during freezing and from knowledge of the temperature at which the supercooled protoplasm of the cell can nucleate. Calculation of the kinetics of dehydration requires values for the hydraulic conductivity (Lp) of the cell and for its activation energy (Ea). Using literature values for these parameters in mouse sperm, we calculated curves of water volume versus temperature for four cooling rates between 250 and 2000 degrees C/min. The intracellular nucleation temperature was inferred to be -20 degrees C or above based on the greatly reduced motilities of sperm that underwent rapid cooling to a minimum temperature of between -20 and -70 degrees C. Combining that information regarding nucleation temperature with the computed dehydration curves leads to the conclusion that intracellular freezing should occur only in cells that are cooled at 2000 degrees C/min and not in cells that are cooled at 250-1000 degrees C/min. The calculated rate of 2000 degrees C/min for IIF is approximately eightfold higher than the experimentally inferred value of 260 degrees C/min. Possible reasons for the discrepancy are discussed.  相似文献   

16.
The intracellular ice formation (IIF) behavior of Haliotis diversicolor (small abalone) eggs is investigated in this study, in relation to controlling the cooling rate and the concentration of dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO). The IIF phenomena are monitored under a self-developed thermoelectric cooling (TEC) cryomicroscope system which can achieve accurate temperature control without the use of liquid nitrogen. The accuracy of the isothermal and ramp control is within ±0.5 °C. The IIF results indicate that the IIF of small abalone eggs is well suppressed at cooling rates of 1.5, 3, 7 and 12 °C/min with 2.0, 2.5, 3.0 and 4.0 M DMSO in sea water. As 2.0 M DMSO in sea water is the minimum concentration that has sufficient IIF suppression, it is selected as the suspension solution for the cryopreservation of small abalone eggs in order to consider the solution’s toxicity effect. Moreover, IIF characteristics of the cumulative probability of IIF temperature distribution are shown to be well fitted by the Weibull probabilistic distribution. According to our IIF results and the Weibull distribution parameters, we conclude that cooling at 1.5 °C/min from 20 to −50 °C with 2.0 M DMSO in sea water is more feasible than other combinations of cooling rates and DMSO concentrations in our experiments. Applying this protocol and observing the subsequent osmotic activity, 48.8% of small abalone eggs are osmotically active after thawing. In addition, the higher the cooling rate, the less chance of osmotically active eggs. A separate fertility test experiment, with a cryopreservation protocol of 1.5 °C/min cooling rate and 2.0 M DMSO in sea water, achieves a hatching rate of 23.7%. This study is the first to characterize the IIF behavior of small abalone eggs in regard to the cooling rate and the DMSO concentration. The Weibull probabilistic model fitting in this study is an approach that can be applied by other researchers for effective cryopreservation variability estimation and analysis.  相似文献   

17.
The effect of the rate of rewarming on the survival of 8-cell mouse embryos and blastocysts was examined. The samples were slowly cooled (0.3--0.6 degrees C/min) in 1.5 M-DMSO to temperatures between -10 and -80 degrees C before direct transfer to liquid nitrogen (-196 degrees C). Embryos survived rapid thawing (275--500 degrees C/min) only when slow cooling was terminated at relatively high subzero temperatures (-10 to -50 degrees C). The highest levels of survival in vitro of rapidly thawed 8-cell embryos were obtained after transfer to -196 degrees C from -35 and -40 degrees C (72 to 88%) and of rapidly thawed blastocysts after transfer from -25 to -50 degrees C (69 to 74%). By contrast, for embryos to survive slow thawing (8 to 20 degrees C/min) slow cooling to lower subzero temperatures (-60 degrees C and below) was required before transfer to -196 degrees C. The results indicate that embryos transferred to -196 degrees C from high subzero temperatures contain sufficient intracellular ice to damage them during slow warming but to permit survival after rapid warming. Survival of embryos after rapid dilution of DMSO at room temperature was similar to that after slow (stepwise) dilution at 0 degrees C. There was no difference between the viability of rapidly and slowly thawed embryos after transfer to pseudopregnant foster mothers. It is concluded that the behaviour of mammalian embryos subjected to the stresses of freezing and thawing is similar to that of other mammalian cells. A simpler and quicker method for the preservation of mouse embryos is described.  相似文献   

18.
Status of cryopreservation of embryos from domestic animals.   总被引:6,自引:0,他引:6  
The discovery of glycerol as an effective cryoprotectant for spermatozoa led to research on cryopreservation of embryos. The first successful offspring from frozen-thawed embryos were reported in the mouse and later in other laboratory animals. Subsequently, these techniques were applied to domestic animals. Research in cryopreservation techniques have included studies concerning the type and concentration of cryoprotectant, cooling and freezing rates, seeding and plunging temperatures, thawing temperatures and rates, and methods of cryoprotectant removal. To date, successful results based on pregnancy rates have been obtained with cryopreserved cow, sheep, goat, and horse embryos but no success has been reported in swine. Post-thaw embryo survival has been shown to be dependent on the initial embryo quality, developmental stage, and species. The freezing techniques most frequently used in research and by commercial companies are identified as "equilibrium" cryopreservation. In this technique the embryos are placed in a concentrated glycerol solution (1.4 M in PBS supplemented with BSA) at room temperature and the glycerol is allowed to equilibrate for a 20-min period. During the cooling process the straws are seeded (-4 to -7 degrees C) and cooling is continued at a rate of 0.3 to 0.5 degree C/min to -30 degrees C when bovine embryos may be plunged into LN2. Sheep embryos are successfully frozen with ethylene glycol (1.5 M) or DMSO (1.5 M) rather than with glycerol. Horse embryos have been frozen in 0.5 rather than 0.25 cc straws but with cooling rates and seeding and plunging temperatures similar to those used with bovine embryos. Swine embryos have shown a high sensitivity to temperature and cryoprotectants probably due to their high lipid content and a temperature decrease to 15 or 10 degrees C causes a dramatic increase in the percentage of degenerated embryos. However, a recent study has shown that hatched pig blastocysts survived exposure below 15 degrees C. Recent research has shown that embryos may also be frozen by a "nonequilibrium" method. This rapid freezing by vitrification consists of dehydration of the embryo at room temperature by a very highly concentrated vitrification media (3.5 to 4.0 M) and a very rapid freeze that avoids the formation of ice allowing the solution to change from a liquid to a glassy state. Vitrification solutions consist of combinations of sucrose, glycerol, and propylene glycol. With this technique, 50% pregnancy rates have been reported with the bovine blastocyst.  相似文献   

19.
Semen cryopreservation of small abalone (Haliotis diversicolor supertexa)   总被引:7,自引:0,他引:7  
Gwo JC  Chen CW  Cheng HY 《Theriogenology》2002,58(8):1563-1578
Methods for cryopreserving spermatozoa and maximizing fertilization rate in Taiwan small abalone, Haliotis diversicolor supertexa, were developed. The gametes (spermatozoa and eggs) of small abalone were viable 3 h post-spawning, with fertilization, and development rate decreasing with time. A minimum of 10(2) cell/ml sperm concentration and a contact time of 2 min between gametes is recommended for artificial insemination of small abalone eggs. Eight cryoprotectants, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), dimethyl acetamide (DMA), ethylene glycol (EG), propylene glycol (PG), butylene glycol (BG), polyethylene glycol, glycerol and methanol, were tested at concentrations between 5 and 25% to evaluate their effect on motility of spermatozoa exposed to cryoprotectant for up to 60 min at 25 degrees C before freezing. The least toxic cryoprotectant, 10% DMSO, was added to artificial seawater (ASW) to formulate the extender for freezing. Semen was diluted 1:1 with the extender, inserted into 1.5 ml microtubes and frozen using a cooling rate between -3.5 and -20 degrees C/min to various transition temperatures (0, -30, -60, -90 and -120 degrees C), followed by transfer and storage in liquid nitrogen (-196 degrees C). The microtubes were thawed from +45 to +145 degrees C/min. Spermatozoa, cooled to -90 degrees C at a cooling rate of -12 or -15 degrees C/min and then immersed in liquid nitrogen, had the best post-thaw motility. Post-thaw sperm motility was markedly reduced compared to fresh sperm. More frozen-thawed spermatozoa are required to achieve fertilization rates comparable to those achieved using fresh spermatozoa.  相似文献   

20.
Mazur P  Pinn IL  Kleinhans FW 《Cryobiology》2007,54(2):223-233
We have previously reported [Cryobiology 51 (2005) 29-53] that intracellular ice formation (IIF) in mouse oocytes suspended in various concentrations of glycerol and ethylene glycol (EG) occurs at temperatures where the percentage of unfrozen water is about 6% and 12%, respectively, even though the IIF temperatures varied from -14 to -41 degrees C. However, because of the way the solutions were prepared, the concentrations of salt and glycerol or EG in that unfrozen fraction at IIF were also rather tightly grouped. The experiments reported in the present paper were designed to separate the effects of the unfrozen fraction at IIF from that of the solute concentration in the unfrozen fraction. This separation makes use of two facts. One is that the concentration of solutes in the residual liquid at a given subzero temperature is fixed regardless of their concentration in the initial unfrozen solution. However, second, the fraction unfrozen at a given temperature is dependent on the initial solute concentration. Experimentally, oocytes were suspended in solutions of glycerol/buffered saline and EG/buffered saline of varying total solute concentration with the restriction that the mass ratios of glycerol and EG to salts are held constant. The oocytes were then cooled rapidly enough (20 degrees C/min) to avoid significant osmotic shrinkage, and the temperature at which IIF occurred was noted. When this is done, we find, as previously that the fraction of water remaining unfrozen at the temperature of IIF remains nearly constant at 5-8% for both glycerol and EG even though the IIF temperatures vary from -14 to -50 degrees C. But unlike the previous results, the salt and CPA concentrations in the unfrozen fraction vary by a factor of three. The present procedure for preparing the solutions produces a potentially complicating factor; namely, the cell volumes vary substantially prior to freezing: substantially greater than isotonic in some solutions; substantially smaller in others. However, the data in toto demonstrate that cell volume is not a determining factor in the IIF temperature.  相似文献   

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